Purging and Calorie Absorption in Bulimic Patients and Normal Women

  1. GEORGE W. BO-LINN, M.D.;
  2. CAROL A. SANTA ANA, B.S.;
  3. STEPHEN G. MORAWSKI, B.A.; and
  4. JOHN S. FORDTRAN, M.D.
  1. Dallas, Texas

    Abstract

    Self-induced purging with laxatives is common among bulimic persons, who assume that purging reduces intestinal absorption of ingested calories. However, the efficacy of purging in reducing calorie absorption has never been studied, probably because the standard calorie balance procedure is expensive and time consuming. With a recently devised method, calorie absorption during a single day was measured to determine to what extent Phenolphthalein or saline purge reduced calorie absorption. In two bulimic patients who regularly used laxatives for weight control and five normal young women, even extreme purging producing 4 to 6 L of diarrhea caused calorie absorption to decrease by only about 12% of calorie intake. The theoretical basis on which laxatives are taken for weight control is unsound.

    Article and Author Information

    • ▸From the Department of Internal Medicine, Baylor University Medical Center; Dallas, Texas.

    • ▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to George W. Bo-Linn, M.D.; Department of Internal Medicine, Baylor University Medical Center; Dallas, TX 75246.

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